2005-06 News Archives
Game Plan/AVCA Team Academic Award Recognizes 274
Schools
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (Aug. 5, 2005) The American Volleyball
Coaches Association is pleased to announce that 274 schools have
achieved the Game Plan/AVCA Team Academic Award for the 2004-2005
season. The 274 schools receiving the honor is the second most in
the program’s history only to the 2003-2004 academic year
when 305 schools achieved the award. All but one division category
in the program either produced the most or second most schools
receiving the honor in the Game Plan/AVCA Team Academic Award
history.
The award, initiated in the 1992-93 academic year, honors college
and high school teams that displayed excellence in the classroom by
maintaining at least a 3.30 cumulative team grade-point average on
a 4.0 scale and a 4.10 cumulative team GPA on a 5.0 scale during
the school year. Nominating head coaches must be AVCA members.
Recipients of the award range from NCAA Division I institutions to
high school girls’ and boys’ teams. The college ranks
produced 148 programs that met the requirements for the award. NCAA
(National Collegiate Athletic Association) Division I schools
earned the mark at 45 schools and fell two short of the overall
record of 47 Division I schools receiving the distinction in
2001-2002. NCAA Division II (26) and NCAA Division III (43) charted
the second highest numbers in program history.
The National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) had 23
of its members achieve the honor this year, while the two-year
college category fell one shy of its most ever with eight
recipients. NCCAA (National Collegiate Christian Athletic
Association) had a record two schools qualify for the award, while
NCAA men’s programs produced its second all-time recipient of
the award. A total of 126 high school boys and girls programs
earned the award in 2004-2005.
“The Game Plan/AVCA Team Academic Award embodies the true
meaning of the student-athlete concept, and the AVCA is honored to
recognize these schools for excellence in the classroom,”
Katherine McConnell, AVCA executive director said. “We
congratulate the student-athletes, as well as the coaches and
school administrations, for maintaining balance between academics
and athletics.”
A total of 801 different schools have won the award in the
program’s 13-year history. Two institutions have earned it
every year in Jonesboro High School (Jonesboro, Ark.) and Ross S.
Sterling High School (Baytown, Texas).
University of Eastern Washington and Indiana State University both
earned the honor for the seventh straight year, the longest active
streak in NCAA Division I. Drury University, a Division II school,
won the award for the ninth consecutive season. Ohio Northern
University achieved its sixth consecutive inclusion on the Game
Plan/AVCA Team Academic Award list. Saint Benedict (Minn.)
collected its second consecutive award and its NCAA Division III
leading ninth overall. College of St. Mary (Neb.) earned the
prestigious honor for the 11th consecutive season, the longest and
most of any NAIA program. Phoenix College (Ariz.) pulled in its
sixth straight award, the longest active streak among two-year
colleges.
Vassar College became the first NCAA Division III men’s
volleyball program to earn the award, and just the second overall
collegiate men’s program.
Four high school programs reached Game Plan/AVCA Team Academic
Award status on both the girls and boys volleyball teams. Pine
Crest School (Fla.), Thomas McKean High School (Del.), Wheaton
Warrenville South (Ill.) and Whitehall High School (Pa.) turned in
the double honor.
Some of this year's award recipients achieved success on the court,
as well as in the classroom. A total of 30 teams that earned the
2004-05 Game Plan/AVCA Team Academic Award also earned a berth in
their respective four-year collegiate postseason national
tournaments.
Six of eight region champions in the 2004 NCAA Division III
Championship field won the Game Plan/AVCA Team Academic award in
Emory University (Ga.), New York University, Washington University
in St. Louis, Williams College (Mass.), University of Wisconsin-La
Crosse and Wittenberg University. Washington University was the
Division III national runnerup, while NYU advanced to the
semifinals.
Each school will receive a plaque, and each player a certificate
commemorating the designation.












